I'll also be enjoying myself talking with scientists. In a departure from past years' programs, most days of this year's DPS meeting feature lengthy plenary sessions, in which the entire meeting is focused on a single track of presenters. I put together this colorful mini block schedule to help me see the shape of the week.

Here is a handy, much more detailed block schedule (PDF), and here is a link to the detailed scientific program. It's front-loaded with Pluto news and asteroid work, while Rosetta, exoplanets, and Mars missions are more toward the end of the week. The whole inner solar system happens on Monday and Tuesday, with poor Venus appearing in only a partial session. (We need new Venus missions.) Solar system moons are scattered, with Titan early in the week and all of the rest of them on Thursday and Friday.

I, for one, support the shift to more plenaries! That, and the half-hour coffee breaks separating 90-minute oral sessions, should make this one more of an actual meeting than usual: hopefully people who don't usually email each other will have a chance to speak face-to-face, exchanging stories and ideas with people outside their research groups. I'm curious to find out what others think of the shift in format. It does mean there are fewer people who have been awarded precious slots for talks. We'll all have to make the most of the three poster sessions to learn about new science.

Stay tuned to planetary.org for the latest space news from DPS!

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